NAME File::Random::Pick - Pick random lines from a file, without duplicates VERSION This document describes version 0.03 of File::Random::Pick (from Perl distribution File-Random-Pick), released on 2019-09-15. SYNOPSIS use File::Random::Pick qw(random_line); my $line = random_line("/usr/share/dict/words"); my @lines = random_line("/usr/share/dict/words", 3); # also accepts a filehandle my $line = random_line($fh); DESCRIPTION This module can return random lines from a specified file, without duplicates. Compared to "random_line()" from File::Random, this module does not return duplicates. I have also submitted a ticket to incorporate this functionality into File::Random [1]. File::Random::Pick also accepts a filehandle, for convenience. FUNCTIONS random_line($path_or_handle [ , $num_lines ]) => list Return random lines from a specified file (or filehandle). Will not return duplicates (meaning, will not return the same line of the file twice, but might still return duplicates if two or more lines contain the same content). Will die on failure to open file. $num_lines defaults to 1. If there are less than $num_lines available in the file, will return just the available number of lines. The algorithm used is from perlfaq ("perldoc -q "random line""), which scans the file once. The algorithm is for returning a single line and is modified to support returning multiple lines. HOMEPAGE Please visit the project's homepage at . SOURCE Source repository is at . BUGS Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature. SEE ALSO File::Random also provides "random_line()" which also uses a slightly modified version of the algorithm described in perlfaq ("perldoc -q "random line"") that avoids slurping the whole file into memory in exchange for scanning the whole file once. However, it might return duplicates. File::RandomLine If you don't mind slurping the whole into memory, you can use List::MoreUtils's "samples" to return N random items from a list. Or, if you also don't mind duplicates, you can just pick random elements from an array of lines. [1] AUTHOR perlancar COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2019, 2015 by perlancar@cpan.org. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.